Alternative Foods of a Diet Specialist, the Snail Kite
- 1 April 1990
- journal article
- research article
- Published by Oxford University Press (OUP) in The Auk
- Vol. 107 (2) , 327-333
- https://doi.org/10.2307/4087616
Abstract
Although Snail Kites (Rostrhamus sociabilis) in Florida [USA] and Venezuela fed mostly on Pomacea snails, I documented three alternative foods. In Florida, kites fed on five species of small turtles, but especially on Sternotherus odoratus and Kinosternon bauri. During the height of a drought, one kite in Florida fed on a small aquatic snail (Viviparus georgianus) for 5 weeks. In Venezuela, freshwater crabs (Dilocarcinus dentatus) made up on average 10% of the Snail Kite''s diet, but more than 25% during September and October. Kites consumed alternative foods with techniques that resemble snail-eating behavior, such as entering a turtle''s body cavity by piercing the only leg shaped like a snail operculum. Handling times for turtles (76 min) and crabs (5.4 min) were much longer than for Pomacea snails (1.5 min). Viviparus snails required approximately one-third less handling time but contained one-fifth less body mass than Pomacea snails. Handling time (30 s) for V. georgianus did not differ between the Snail Kite and the Boat-tailed Grackle (Quiscalus major), a diet generalist. These findings are related to the factors that reinforce diet specialization and the ecological conditions that promote diet diversification in specialists. Like Pomacea snails, alternative foods have shells or carapaces and move relatively slowly. Alternative foods are probably less profitable than Pomacea snails, except for large crabs. Although crabs were regularly eaten by kites in Venezuela, turtles and Viviparus snails were eaten in Florida only during times of food scarcity.This publication has 13 references indexed in Scilit:
- Why White-Winged Crossbills Do Not Defend Feeding TerritoriesThe Auk, 1988
- Mate desertion in the snail kiteAnimal Behaviour, 1987
- The Feeding Habits of the Snail Kite in Florida, USAColonial Waterbirds, 1987
- Demography, Environmental Uncertainty, and the Evolution of Mate Desertion in the Snail KiteEcology, 1986
- The Role of Profitability in Snail Kite ForagingJournal of Animal Ecology, 1985
- Hunting Behavior, Prey Selection, and Energetics of Snail Kites in Guyana: Consumer Choice by a SpecialistThe Auk, 1983
- Notes on Nesting Raptors in the Llanos of VenezuelaOrnithological Applications, 1981
- Everglade Kites Feed on Nonsnail PreyThe Auk, 1974
- Notes on the Snail Kite in SurinamThe Auk, 1970
- Notes on the Feeding Habits and Food of Some Hawks of SurinamOrnithological Applications, 1962